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UK ARTICLE: Bedroom Bores

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1994-05-05 23:48flu'id (floo'-) UK ARTICLE: Bedroom Bores
1994-05-08 22:53Jules Marshall Re: UK ARTICLE: Bedroom Bores
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1994-05-05 23:48flu'id (floo'-)From The Times, Friday April 29 1994. _UP TO SOMETHING IN THE BEDROOM_ They're hot in the
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flu'id (floo'-)
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Thu, 5 May 1994 19:48:29 -0400 (EDT)
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UK ARTICLE: Bedroom Bores
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From The Times, Friday April 29 1994. _UP TO SOMETHING IN THE BEDROOM_ They're hot in the clubs, but low in social skills. David Troop meets techno's bores with attitude. Just over 30 years ago, Brian Wilson and Gary Usher wrote a poignant song for the Beach Boys entitled `in my room'. "Gary recognised that the music room served as a sanctuary to me," Wilson wrote in his autobiography. He never got over the fact that I slept there, right beside the piano." For three subsequent decades, bedroom music was a term resolved for activities involving satin sheets, impractical night attire and the non-verbal communication of Barry White. But running neck-and-neck with the development of the so-called electronic cottage, the bedroom has cast aside associations with the boudoir. With sex becoming impossible and human interaction increasingly unnecessary, the bedroom has resumed its rightful role as a monastic cell devoted to solitary music-making. At the head of the queue of young obsessives who record prodigious quantities of electronic music en route to the bathroom is the Aphex Twin. Known on his passport as Richard James, the Twin claims that he rarely sleeps. Bedrooms are for work and, even in rare moments of repose, he cultivates a talent for lucid dreaming, during which he composes new material. Not only has he taken his blatantly uncommercial music to No 11 in the national album charts; he also co-owns a record company named Rephlex, encouraging others to expose their domestic creations to the big wide world. The Twin's comments about the musicians signed to Rephlex could be construed as less than flattering. "They've all got these strange personalities you've never seen in the pop stardom world," he says. "The people on our label are in their bedrooms all day long. They make four tracks a day. They are people you can't hold a conversation with, people like me, bedroom bores, coming into the public eye. That's quite amusing." In the Twin's view, Michael Paradinas is a particularly amusing member of the Rephlex roster. The more active half of a techno duo known as Mu-ziq, Paradinas has released a well-received album entitled Tango n'Vectif. "He doesn't know the art of conversation," says the Twin. "He's just really introverted." This seems a fair judgement of a man whose follow-up album, Bluff Limbo, has been leaked onto the market four months before its official release in a limited edition vinyl package entirely lacking in helpful information. True to form, Paradinas in person is painfully reserved. Barely a flicker of reaction crosses his features when I tell him about the bedroom bores. This is a technological revolution and, as with all revolutionaries, those on the barricades are scornful of those stubborn souls who fight to maintain the old order. Affordable prices for digital recording and computer software have unleashed a hungry host of musicians who might otherwise have taken to train-spotting rather than brave the rigours of working in close proximity to music business professionals. For Paradinas, the notion of working in a proper recording studio is a nightmare. "You can't distort," he shudders. A 22-year-old former architecture student, he lives in south London with his mother, who insists that he uses headphones. "When she goes out to the shops, I can hear what it sounds like on loudspeakers, which is another sad aspect," he admits. The first sad aspect, Paradinas says, is the prospect of never leaving the bedroom. "There's something to be said for working with other musicians, but not in your bedroom," he says. "Playing live is good because you can learn a lot. I think I have, probably because I've played in bands since I was about nine." In case this should be interpreted as faint-hearted humanism, he makes a stronger case for the loneliness of the long-distance computer musician. "I prefer working on my own", he says, "because I can do what I want instead of having to say: `Do you think it sounds good?' I just put it in, even if it sounds cheesy. I can do a track in an hour, whereas if you're with someone else it can take four hours." Some people might find such ruthless isolationism depressing, I suggest. "You get more time for other things," he says. "I dont miss Neighbours because I can do a track before it comes on." With his combination of violently distorted drum machine sounds and disturbingly bland melodies, Paradinas sits on the cutting edge of techno. Further out, in the west London suburbs, even younger bedroom bores are waiting to take his place. Daniel Pemberton is a confident 16-year-old who disguises his electronic music activities from all but his closest of school friends. At his home near Hampton Court, he churns out cassettes of impressively accomplished ambient techno on equipment financed by writing reviews for a computer games magazine. Some of it sounds the equal of music written by Hollywood composers who win Oscars, but Pemberton is better off not knowing that until his exam revision is finished. Already, a minor bidding war is in progress as record companies in Belgium, Germany and Britain fight to release his debut album, called, appropriately enough, Bedroom. Pemberton is impressed, but adolescently diffident enough to jeopardise his chances of closing a deal. After all, his mother studied textile design at Winchester College of Art when Brian Eno was president of the Students Union. "It really freaked me out, that," he says. Of course, he has peers who still thrash out noisy guitar music. "There are quite a few bands at our school", he says, "but most of them are probably knob." Too bright to be a bore, but too now to be knob, Pemberton is simply bedroom. [end article] The picture included was of Michael Paradinas, aka Mu-Ziq, at work in his bedroom. :) _______ (__,-, \ / /\ \ f l u i d <finger me for PGP key> /,_) \ \ flu'id (floo'-) (/ \\ brit@chopin.udel.edu :65 FD F9 9F F2 23 F8 CF: \) fluid@freezer.cns.udel.edu :80 9C 11 AA 9F 92 0D 27:
1994-05-08 22:53Jules MarshallFloo - thanks for that: > From The Times, Friday April 29 1994. > > _UP TO SOMETHING IN TH
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Jules Marshall
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Sun, 8 May 1994 22:53:34 +0000
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Re: UK ARTICLE: Bedroom Bores
permalink · <199405090909.AA21159@xs4all.hacktic.nl>
Floo - thanks for that:
quoted 7 lines From The Times, Friday April 29 1994.> From The Times, Friday April 29 1994. > > _UP TO SOMETHING IN THE BEDROOM_ > > They're hot in the clubs, but low in social skills. David Troop meets > techno's bores with attitude. >
Have you seen the article in this issue of Modern Review by Kodwo Eshun on a similar theme? Longer, funnier, more in depth. cheers, jules Mediamatic Magazine Mediamatic Interactive Publishing Mediamatic On Line P.O. Box 17490 1001 JL Amsterdam The Netherlands voice: +31-20 6266262 fax: +31-20 6263793